4.6 Article

X-ray computed microtomography of threedimensional microcracks and self-healing in engineered cementitious composites

Journal

SMART MATERIALS AND STRUCTURES
Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0964-1726/24/1/015021

Keywords

x-ray computed microtomography; self-healing; engineered cementitious composites; microstructure; distributed microcracking; image analysis

Funding

  1. US Department of Energy Nuclear Engineering Research Program [DE-AC07-05ID14517]

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Concrete cracking and deterioration can potentially be addressed by innovative self-healing cementitious materials, which can autogenously regain transport properties and mechanical characteristics after the damage self-healing process. For the development of such materials, it is crucial, but challenging, to precisely characterize the extent and quality of self-healing due to a variety of factors. This study adopted x-ray computed microtomography (mu CT) to derive three-dimensional morphological data on microcracks before and after healing in engineered cementitious composite (ECC). Scanning electron microscope and energy dispersive x-ray spectroscopy were also used to morphologically and chemically analyze the healing products. This work showed that the evolution of the microcrack 3D structure due to self-healing in cementitious materials can be directly and quantitatively characterized by mu CT. A detailed description of the mu CT image analysis method applied to ECC self-healing was presented. The results revealed that the self-healing extent and rate strongly depended on initial surface crack width, with smaller crack width favoring fast and robust self-healing. We also found that the selfhealing mechanism in cementitious materials is dependent on crack depth. The region of a crack close to the surface (from 0 to around 50-150 mu m below the surface) can be sealed quickly with crystalline precipitates. However, at greater depths the healing process inside the crack takes a significantly longer time to occur, with healing products more likely resulting from continued hydration and pozzolanic reactions. Finally, the mu CT method was compared with other selfhealing characterization methods, with discussions on its importance in generating new scientific knowledge for the development of robust self-healing cementitious materials.

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